The Force Is With Us
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
DIGG THIS
It is a marvelous
thing to see the market work, in good times and bad. Just look at
the way that marvelous, unplanned barometer of wise resource use
– the price system – has reacted in response to the human reality
of economic downturn.
As we prepare
for the future with the holidays upon us, consumers are wondering
whether it is a wise thing to take on too many new financial burdens.
They are cutting back and still somewhat indecisive about the economic
climate. For most people, the only real evidence of downturn they
see is the devastation that has been wrought on their retirement
accounts. This causes quite a psychological hesitation to buy.
What consumers
need to spend is a solid inducement, one that coordinates financial
responsibility with their material needs. And the retailers are
there to provide it. Thus are prices being chopped from one end
of the country to the other. Earrings that were $700 are now $250,
purses that were $1000 are now $250, large-screen televisions that
were $2000 are now $1,200, and suits that were $900 are going for
$400. Deals are everywhere, from laptops to cell phones to cars.
The street wisdom is that now is the time to buy.
Imagine if
these prices were fixed by a central committee. The response would
be slow in coming if it happened at all. The committee would likely
stick by some cost-plus pricing rule that wedded present realities
to past expense. But in the free market, there is only one reality
and that is the present problem of balancing consumer demand with
economic viability.
The price mechanism
provides a means of coordinating consumer demands with producer
realities. Retailers are wildly overstocked with goods now, having
made their purchases for Christmas back in the spring or summer.
(We should never forget that sellers have to buy goods before they
sell them, and that this is always a speculative enterprise.)
The downturn
hit hard and suddenly, and its impact has been felt up and down
the structure of production. Retailers find themselves with a serious
problem of overstuffed inventory, a declining cash flow, and a financial
sector that is risk-averse. The solution is to disgorge, and this
accords precisely with the demand of consumers. So in this one signal
of the price we see a remarkable coordination taking place.
When you put
all these price cuts together – and they are pervasive – you end
up with a macroeconomic setting that is a great relief to consumers
in troubled times. Wouldn't you know that the press would find this
to be a cause to bellyache about the supposed dangers of "deflation."
And in a crazy, upside down way, we find politicians, financial
managers, and economists quoted all over the place who have deduced
that the real problem with the economy is falling prices.
They
are confusing cause and effect. The cause of the downturn is that
the bubble burst, and the effect is downward pressure on prices.
The interests of producers and consumers are being coordinated here.
For central planners to interrupt this process will only end up
punishing everyone, so that consumers will not be able to save money
on good deals and businesses will end up carrying more inventory
than they can afford. We will be robbed of the blessing of lower
prices, which are, contrary to what some people say, wholly compatible
with economic growth.
Also, the less
that consumers spend now means that the more they have left over
to save for the future, which also seems to be a wise choice today.
Not only that:
falling prices are an important means for flushing economic error
out of a system that is rife with malinvestments generated during
boom times. I won't go into this point further but rather point
you to the mind-opening work of Guido Hülsmann: Deflation
and Liberty.
Those who posit
a disharmony of interests between consumers who want falling prices
and overall economic health are showing an attachment to Keynesian-style
thinking, which at its most fundamental level asserts that prices
don't work to coordinate supply and demand. In fact, we see them
working every day. The market, if left alone, is the means by which
harmony among all market actors is achieved.
Many people
have wondered how it is possible that the Federal Reserve would
be engaging in such a massive expansionary trend, creating money
without limit, even as prices tend to fall. The answer can be found
in the balance sheets of the banking system. The reserves are there
but they are finding few willing borrowers. We often hear about
the credit crunch, but the real source of the supposed problem here
is a borrowing crunch. Borrowers are not in any position to expand
and invest for the future. This is why, despite the Fed's effort
to expand, the money supply today is actually shrinking.
The
Fed is pushing a variety of workarounds that would inject trillions
in new money into the economy while bypassing the banking system
altogether. Time will tell whether or not this will succeed. Meanwhile,
a serious danger lurks around the corner. Once the recession is
over, the lending will start again. With fractional-reserve banking
and limitless supplies of cash on hand, we will likely see the overall
price trends reversed, from deflation to inflation to possible hyperinflation.
The timing and the extent entirely depend on many unknowns, but
it is something worth thinking about today.
The urgency
of price declines today, then, becomes all the more apparent. Now
is the time to cut prices as low as possible. Yes, this means growing
business failures, unemployment, and much worse, but this is precisely
what is needed. As the Austrians have long said, the recession is
a necessary phase. It is not an economic blight but a tonic that
heals. If we let the market work without trying to interfere with
its operations, we will see that the recession will bottom out and
the economy prepare for future growth.
There is nothing
that the government can do today – apart from repealing laws and
regulations – that will make an improvement on the workings of the
market. As Mises wrote in Profit
and Loss, the price system is our guide to both success
and failure under conditions of freedom. We need to be as tolerant
toward one tendency as the other.
December
2, 2008
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is founder and president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, editor of LewRockwell.com,
and author of Speaking
of Liberty.
Copyright
© 2008 LewRockwell.com
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